5 Good Image Search Engines Apart From Google Image Search

When the right picture is everything, you need to go deep into the web and comb through the millions that are out there. Image search is just like normal search and similarly painstaking. Making it less so are the dedicated image search engines.

Image search engines sift through the web searching by type of image, by license or by tags and keywords. There are of course, standalone photo reservoirs like Flickr, Stock.xchng, Photobucket, Morguefile et.al; but your kind of image may just be tucked away in some other obscure corner of the web. Google Image Search is powerful but it always pays to have a few more options up your browser.

This is where these five image search engines come into the picture.

Cyclo.ps

In Greek mythology, it’s a giant with a single eye. As a stock photography search engine, it keeps both eyes on sites like BigStockPhoto, Flickr, Fotolia, Cutcaster, StockVault, Photos.com, ShutterStock and stockx.xchng. The search interface is typically simple and you can search by selecting specific stock photo sites or all of them in one go. A horizontal menu and also a dropdown let you view results by respective site. Clicking on the thumbnail previews takes you to the source where you can see the details attached with the photo.

Cyclo.ps gives the user a Lightbox account where he can save (by clicking the little plus icon), tag, share, and print (only the thumbnail) his selected photos. Visitors can also add comments to your shared images.

Pixsy

Type in your query and you can get what you are searching for amidst millions of images and videos. This search platform delivers both. The web app looks into the RSS feed of variety of news sites and content providers like Yahoo and extracts the image previews. Clicking on the thumbnail preview takes you directly to the source. The source webpage opens in a two frame layout with a Pixsy brief on top and the source page below. You can filter the search by content type (image or video), category and source (BBC, MSNBC, Rolling Stone, Webshots, Yahoo etc).

Ferret out the image or video you want using Spffy’s multiple searches. Spffy checks out a cross-section of sources like stock photo sites, web sources like Flickr, public domain sites and videos from YouTube. You can tune your stock search with settings for royalty-free, rights-managed and news/archival. Web search on Flickr can also be similarly configured for relevance.

The Canada-based search engine company looks at the visual shape rather than the meta-data. This gives rather interesting results which are distinct from the others profiled here. The image search is fast though the number of results is not plentiful. You enter a keyword and then select an image from the results to do a similarity search. A moving slider to control the number of images per page is the only preference tool to set.

Picsearch indexes the web for images and is probably the best of the lot. The About Page of the site says that its unique search algorithm is due for a patent. The search engine has indexed more than 3,000,000,000 images. You can set a few preferences like an interface language.

Advanced search options give you several image factors like color or black and white, animation or image, portrait or landscape and more importantly the ability to search by image size. You can also use normal search operators to fine-tune your search. The site also comes with a family filter to keep out you-know-those kind of images away from the mix.

There are two things I really liked about the site. Firstly, its speed; and secondly, the Image Directory which is a vast collection of subject specific images. Oh yes, there’s a third thing to like too ““ it comes with a Firefox extension.

In listing these five sites, I have tried to go beyond the omnipresent searches provided by the regulars like Google, Yahoo and Bing. When it comes to search, often a single tool does the job; but there are also times when many need to be pushed into action. Along with these five, you can check out two others we have profiled before ““

Do remember that although these search engines may give you the right image ““ using the image itself is subject to copyright. So do check the sources before you click on save. If unable to do so, what are search engines for”¦hunt out a few more.

Which is your image search engine of choice? Does your image search go beyond the biggies? Let us into the picture.

Food

October 30, 2009

Cool post. Heard of Picsearch before but not any of the others. Have you heard of “TinEye” that’s a reverse search engine by showing where a certain image is hosted, after uploading a photo or sending a URL, its in its infancy but pretty cool?

Saikat

October 31, 2009

Yes, there are quite a few reverse image engines out there. I think we have covered Tineye here at MUO.The problem is not with how many…but with how many survive the churn. There were quite a few old ones but I found that they no longer exist when I started researching for this post.

slaughter

October 31, 2009

Who uses google image search? Like most things, Yahoo is still better. People have been conditioned to “google it”, not knowing Yahoo mail, calander, image search, flickr, ect.. are all better than Google’s offering.

Tyler Olson

November 2, 2009

Nice to see you highlighting some legit image searches that search the source and put the buyer in contact with the seller. It seems far to common for images to be swiped from the internet without proper attribution or payment. Hopefully sites like Cyclopes make people aware that the images are actually for sale at a reasonable price from stock agencies.

Use Pics Legally

November 2, 2009

Google Image Search, and other such engines, has clearly changed the way we think about online pictures â€“ allowing everyone greater access to the Webâ€™s multitude of photographs. Unfortunately, Google Image Search and other such search capabilities donâ€™t solve the problem of copyright and intellectual property issues. Issues that have lead to infringement cases in the past. This is why, if you are a frequent online-picture user, (design or advertisement and other creative industries especially) you should head over to imagex.picscout.com/Download/Register, (homepage: picscout.com/) to sign up for the beta edition of PicScoutâ€™s innovative ImageExchange technology, and leave infringement issues in the past.